Not even a year after trading Pierce and Kevin Garnett to the Brooklyn Nets and jump-starting a long-overdue rebuilding project, Celtics general manager Danny Ainge hasn't ruled out the possibility of The Truth's return, per WEEI's Ben Rohrbach:

Ainge on possibility of bringing Paul Pierce back: "At the right price, right circumstance."

I know what you're thinking: The Ainge household most definitely recycles.

You're also thinking: What would be the right circumstance?

Well, for starters, Pierce would need to be available. And wouldn't you know it, he's a free agent this summer. What a coincidence.

A massive pay cut would also need to be involved. Pierce is earning over $15.3 million this season, according to ShamSports. There's little chance the Celtics would be willing to pay him even half his current salary.

More than anything, though, the Celtics need to be attractive.

Returning to Boston is something Pierce would most definitely consider, but only if the Celtics are prepared to win. That's the whole reason he left, why he was traded. He didn't want to be part of another rebuild. It's like Pro Basketball Talk's Kurt Helin wrote in August, sentimental attachment only means so much:

Paul Pierce will always love Boston, he’s admitted being traded out of there this summer has been hard on him. His number will eventually go into the rafters and generations of Celtics fans will tell their kids about “The Truth.”

That didn’t mean he wanted to stay through a rebuild.

Winning is the biggest snag in any potential return. Boston only began rebuilding. The Celtics won only 25 games this year. They would need a complete reversal of direction if Pierce's return is to make sense for both parties.

The good news there is Ainge clearly despises rebuilding and is growing impatient:

Danny Ainge: "I don't [have the patience for another losing season]. I didn't like that season very much."

Before you go busting out the ol', not-yet-besieged-by-mothballs Pierce Celtics jersey, understand that a return is unlikely.

Trading for an All-Star isn't easy. Though the Celtics have plenty of roster flexibility, they aren't teeming with the assets necessary to give Rajon Rondo a superstar sidekick who vaults them back into contention. Any deal they strike would have to include one or more of their first-round picks for this year's draft.

There's also no guaranteeing the Celtics don't traverse a completely different path.

Instead of landing an All-Star, they could decide to trade their own. No one on their roster is untouchable.